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Hi,

One of the things I hate is when friends/neighbors find out that I am a programmer, and automatically assume I like to fix other peoples computers (hardware/software problems).

As a programmer, what can you do to explain to others you are not a hardware person?

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How about "I am not technical support." – Robert S. Nov 24 '08 at 21:19
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People talk to programmers? – zarawesome Nov 24 '08 at 22:30
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65 Answers

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Because I'm a programmer I'm assumed to know how to do things like Mail Merge and print out mailing labels in Word. Even when I'm no where near a PC.

Thing is I usually have a better chance of figuring it out than my parents do, so I don't mind so much.

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You probably asked this to give people a chance to vent, but here's why:

They ask you, because you have got more idea about whatever the problem is than they do. As a programmer you have a better chance of figuring out if it's a hardware problem, driver problem, application problem, etc.

What does annoy me is random questions about how to use shareware programs that I've never heard of.

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vote up 54 vote down

I just go ahead and fix their stuff - the disastrous result ensures they never ask again.

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I make my family buy from Dell and get an extended warranty. That way when they have a hardware problem I have them call Dell instead because "it's their fault".

For the neighbor case, not much to do :(

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I as a recently graduated telecommunications engineer was supposed to fix the TV set or my mom's mixer

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